Thursday, April 28, 2011

I wasnt really looking forward to Ryan Reynolds playing the role of Hal Jordan, but this trailer made Thor look so bad in comparison I've been converted. Very Excited about this one for the Big Summer Movies. :D

Monday, April 18, 2011

London: The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) has published in its website a bizarre memo that proves aliens did land in New Mexico in 1947.

FBI releases 'memo that proves aliens did land in New Mexico in 1947'

London: The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) has published in its website a bizarre memo that proves aliens did land in New Mexico in 1947.

The memo titled ''Flying Saucers'', written by FBI agent Guy Hottel, is published in the agency's new online resource 'The Vault'.
Hottel, who was in charge of the Washington field office in 1950, reveals that an Air Force investigator had stated that 'three so-called flying saucers had been recovered in New Mexico', reports the Daily Mail.
The investigator gave the information to a special agent, he said.
The FBI has censored both the agent and the investigator''s identity.
"They were described as being circular in shape with raised centers, approximately 50 feet in diameter," said Hottel.
"Each one was occupied by three bodies of human shape but only 3 feet tall," he added.

The bodies were ''dressed in a metallic cloth of a very fine texture. Each body was bandaged in a manner similar to the blackout suits used by speed flyers and test pilots.''
Hottel said that the informant, whose identity was censored in the memo, claimed the saucers had been found in New Mexico ''due to the fact that the government has a very high-powered radar set-up in that area and it is believed the radar interferes with the controlling mechanism of the saucers''.
He then stated that the special agent did not attempt to investigate further.
The release of the secret memo is likely to fuel conspiracy theorists'' claims of a government cover-up.
The town of Roswell in New Mexico became infamous after reports that a flying saucer had crashed in the desert near a military base there on or around July 2, 1947.

Film footage claimed to have been taken by a U.S. military official shortly after the Roswell incident, and purportedly showing an alien autopsy, was produced in 1995 by Ray Santilli, a London-based video entrepreneur. The footage caused an international sensation when it aired on television networks around the world. In 2006, Santilli admitted that the film was mostly a reconstruction but continued to claim that it was based on genuine footage now lost, and that some frames from the original remained. The view of many, however, is that the film was a hoax in its entirety.

Military authorities issued a press release, which began: 'The many rumours regarding the flying disc became a reality yesterday when the intelligence officer of the 509th Bomb Group of the Eighth Air Force, Roswell Army Air Field, was fortunate enough to gain possession of a disc.'
The headlines screamed: ''Flying Disc captured by Air Force.''
Yet, just 24 hours later, the military changed their story and claimed the object they''d first thought was a ''flying disc'' was a weather balloon that had crashed on a nearby ranch.
Amazingly, the media and the public accepted the explanation without question.
Roswell disappeared from the news until the late Seventies, when some of the military involved began to speak out.

Brigadier General Roger M. Ramey (kneeling) and chief of staff Colonel Thomas J. Dubose with weather balloon in Fort Worth, Texas, July 8, 1947. Ramey claimed this was the debris of a "flying disk" found near Roswell, New Mexico.

Another memo published in The Vault from 1947 claimed that an object ''purporting to be a flying disc'' had been recovered near Roswell.
The disc was ''hexagonal in shape'' and ''suspended from a balloon by a cable'', according to the memo, marked as ''Urgent'', to the FBI director.
The memo noted that the disc resembled a weather balloon - but claimed that a telephone conversation between the Air Force and the field office ''had not [word censored] borne out this belief''.
The disc and balloon were being transported to Wright Field for further inspection, the memo noted.
It added that the information was being flagged up because of ''national interest'' in the episode, and noting that both NBC and the AP were set to break the story that day.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

" I yearned mightily to enter this fascinating yet repellent city, and besought the bearded man to land me at the stone pier by the huge carven gate Akariel; but he gently denied my wish, saying: "Into Thalarion, the City of a Thousand Wonders, many have passed but none returned. Therein walk only daemons and mad things that are no longer men, and the streets are white with the unburied bones of those who have looked upon the eidolon Lathi, that reigns over the city." ------H.P Lovecraft from "The White Ship"

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Do I have the Comic for you. Locke & Key is written by no other than Joe Hill (aka Stephen King's son). In this First part of the the story we meet the Locke family; mother Nina, oldest son Tyler, younger son Bode and daughter Kinsey, as they prepare to move into a large, sprawling estate called Keyhouse. The father, Randall, was shot and killed some weeks before by one of his former students, a very disturbed man named Sam. Randall always told his wife that if anything were to happen to him, he wanted them to come to this mansion located in the fictional town of Lovecraft, Massachusetts, where he and his brother grew up.

Each child is dealing with his or her own issues; Tyler is wracked with guilt because in a moment of frustration he had mentioned, to the very man who killed him, that he wanted his overbearing father dead. Kinsey is trying to blend in with her new school as much as she can; not wanting to be known as the “girl whose father was killed”, and Bode has found a very strange new friend in the well behind the house. An echo, as it calls itself, but not Bode’s…

Keyhouse, the family is told, is very special, and Bode is the first one to find out just how special. The echo tells him that there are certain keys that can be used on certain doors that will make amazing things happen. If he wants to see what it’s like to be an adult, there’s a door that he can use that will show him. If he wants to be a girl, he can walk through one that will switch genders. And then there’s the anywhere key, which will take him anywhere he can imagine, just by thinking of it.

But as we soon learn, Keyhouse is not all just fantastical doorways and magic keys; there’s something very sinister going on just under the surface, something that doesn’t want the Locke family back in this house, and this is what enables Sam to escape from his jail cell and head back to finish the job he started when he killed the family’s patriarch.